Spiritual Care: The Nurses’ Experiences in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit

Journal Title: Religions - Year 2016, Vol 7, Issue 3

Abstract

Physical aspects of disease management are often more evident than those related to spirituality or spiritual care. Spirituality may appear more crucial in pediatric intensive care units (PICUs) when patients are experiencing serious illness or end-of-life situations. This paper describes the meaning of spirituality according to nurses who had worked in PICUs and how they provide spiritual care to children and their families. It is an exploratory research using a qualitative approach, including interviews with eleven PICU nurses. Data were analyzed using thematic analysis; two themes were identified: meanings of spirituality and religiosity according to nurses, and the provision of spiritual care to children in the PICU and their families. The interviewed nurses recognized the importance and value of spiritual care and are aware that spiritual needs are considered to be of significantly less importance than physical treatments. Spiritual care was mainly focused on the children’s families; the nurses justified the absence of spiritual care to children, based on lack of time and children’s age and level of consciousness. These results highlight a deficiency in spiritual care in PICUs and demonstrate the need for improved knowledge and demonstrate the need to not only raise awareness of the spiritual dimension of children, adolescents, and their families, but also to enhance discussion and improve general knowledge on the importance of spirituality in the treatment regimen to provide effective holistic care.

Authors and Affiliations

Lucila C. Nascimento, Willyane A. Alvarenga, Sílvia Caldeira, Tâmisa M. Mica, Fabiane C. S. Oliveira, Raquel Pan, Tabatha F. M. Santos, Emília C. Carvalho and Margarida Vieira

Keywords

Related Articles

Adorned by Power: The Individualized Experience of the Mojo Bag

In America, no religion better exemplifies the power of the individual than Hoodoo. Within these peripheral communities in the South, enslaved persons created spaces in which individual practitioners could choose which...

Muslim Work Ethics: Relationships with Religious Orientations and the “Perfect Man” (Ensan-e K ¯ amel ¯ ) in Managers and Staff in Iran

Weber’s association of a work ethic with Protestantism has been extended to religions, including Islam, more generally. Managers and staff in a bank and department store in Tehran responded to Muslim religiousness meas...

The Empirical Ties between Religious Motivation and Altruism in Foster Parents: Implications for Faith-Based Initiatives in Foster Care and Adoption

Amidst a crisis shortage of foster homes in the child welfare system, a number of innovative faith-based collaborations aimed at recruiting foster parents have recently emerged. It has been suggested that these collabo...

From Religious Diversity to Political Competition: The Differentiation Process of Pentecostalism in Brazil

The growing religious diversity in Brazil has more to do with a differentiation process within Pentecostalism itself than with the presence of very diverse religious groups. Starting with the analysis of such different...

When Institutions Collide: The Competing Forces of Hospitals Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Church

For centuries, the Catholic Church has been a major social actor in the provision of health services, particularly health care delivered in hospitals. Through a confluence of powerful environmental forces at the beginn...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP25524
  • DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/rel7030027
  • Views 319
  • Downloads 8

How To Cite

Lucila C. Nascimento, Willyane A. Alvarenga, Sílvia Caldeira, Tâmisa M. Mica, Fabiane C. S. Oliveira, Raquel Pan, Tabatha F. M. Santos, Emília C. Carvalho and Margarida Vieira (2016). Spiritual Care: The Nurses’ Experiences in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit. Religions, 7(3), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-25524